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Principles of Finance: Unit 5, Lifecycle: The How and Why of Muni Bonds 6 Views
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The how and why of Muni Bonds.
Transcript
- 00:00
principles of finance a la shmoop lifecycle the how and why of muni bonds
- 00:07
will ever be into a town hall meeting and they usually have lots of retired [town hall meeting full of old people]
- 00:11
people attending their lousy coffee a lot of blue hair rinses and dentures
- 00:15
yeah don't trip on those and yet municipalities are the backbone [Uncle Sam seen as a skeleton]
- 00:19
infrastructure of our country they build the parks and buildings and sewers and
Full Transcript
- 00:24
garbage collection thingies and so on you know the things that make us go or
- 00:28
deal with us after we you know go well some examples of muni bonds here we go [public toilets]
- 00:33
new york city needs improvements to its subway system so it is bonds to pay for [people getting onto subway train]
- 00:38
him the local NBA squad wants a new arena or it's moving to Vancouver or [basketball court]
- 00:43
Seattle or wherever the home city desperately wants to keep him there so
- 00:47
it issues muni bonds to build those overpaid pituitary freaks a new home
- 00:52
all right well crime capital USA wants more cops on the streets crime capital
- 00:56
has to pay for those additional heroes wages training new squad cars yeah they
- 01:01
all require big bucks solution issue bonds uni bonds all right well there are
- 01:06
really only two flavours immune Yvonne's general obligation bonds and revenue
- 01:10
bonds well the state or local issuer assures repayment through quote Full
- 01:15
Faith and Credit unquote but there is a huge difference between them with
- 01:19
Treasuries Full Faith and Credit means that the US government unconditionally [picture of government building]
- 01:24
promises to pay all interest and principal even if it has to run the
- 01:29
presses 24/7 to print enough money to do so Geo's or general obligation bonds on [money getting printed]
- 01:34
the other hand pay interest and principal from taxes that the issuer can
- 01:38
levy on its local citizens income tax property tax sales tax sin tax
- 01:43
cigarettes and booze or examples of these if there's a way to extract a
- 01:47
tithe a municipality might actually try it well The Full Faith and Credit is the [money collected during town hall meeting]
- 01:51
issuer's unconditional promise to pay unless some you know they can't generate
- 01:55
enough tax revenue to do so then Full Faith and Credit fades to pay you messed
- 02:01
up you trusted us aren't any animal house fans out there yeah that's great
- 02:05
one all right well revenue bonds do not offer any Full Faith and Credit comfort [writing on white board]
- 02:09
payment on these bonds comes from the revenue generated from what the bond
- 02:13
were used to create bonds to build a toll bridge or good example here the
- 02:17
issuer can estimate fairly accurately the revenue that will be generated from
- 02:21
the tolls and then it's up to the investors to decide if that revenue will [hand passes briefcase full of money]
- 02:25
be sufficient to service the debt a hybrid mut formed from both of these
- 02:29
concepts is a double-barreled bond which is backed by both taxes and revenues
- 02:34
think of a County Beach that charges admission and/or parking one other type [people leaving county beach]
- 02:39
of Muni is an industrial revenue bond this is where the municipality issues
- 02:43
debt to pay for something that's ostensibly for private use like you know
- 02:47
a new sports stadium well the issuer gets a piece of the revenue generated [ariel view of sports stadium]
- 02:50
from that stadium and uses it to pay off the bonds and usually there's a whole
- 02:54
lot of horse trading in the stadium has to hire a whole bunch of union workers
- 02:58
at full price to get the muni bond to be supported by the masses in fact many
- 03:02
concepts in the land of Muni derive in analogous fashion to those in the
- 03:06
corporate world so if this section feels a bit deja vu well it's no accident
- 03:10
shall we dive in deeper oh yes we should okay so general obligation bonds again
- 03:15
think Full Faith and Credit the city pledges to pay no matter what and that
- 03:20
what can mean that the city itself goes bankrupt and in fact that bizarro land
- 03:25
phenomenon is starting to happen more and more around the country general [map of USA]
- 03:28
obligation bonds are usually used for general things like sewage treatment
- 03:33
plants infrastructure maintenance cops firemen and you know like well the main
- 03:38
thread linking these is that their activities that don't themselves [web of string linking these activities]
- 03:41
generate revenue then the city pays off the bonds from its general flow of
- 03:46
revenues like fishing licenses and parking tickets income and property
- 03:50
taxes medicinal marijuana franchise license fees and and so on well since
- 03:54
geo bonds are backed by The Full Faith and Credit those responsible for the
- 03:58
full faith in such credit must approve their issuance and who might these
- 04:02
people be yes the citizens of the locality issuing them yeah that would be [time lapse of people in public places]
- 04:07
you most geo bonds get paid out of property
- 04:10
taxes the $5 word for which is ad valorem
- 04:16
during the Reagan era California passed Proposition 13 which set out the manner [president signing papers]
- 04:21
in which taxes would be levied on the proletariat specifically prop 13 did
- 04:26
away with all the old real estate tax systems and charged a simple real estate
- 04:30
tax equal to 1.25 percent of the purchase price of the home plus a kicker
- 04:35
for inflation each year well California experienced one of the great real estate
- 04:38
booms in history from the early 1980s until the crash of 2008 nine during that
- 04:44
era real estate compounded in value at something like 15% a year depending on [ariel view of suburbia]
- 04:48
where you lived in Silicon Valley was a whole lot more than that and Gilroy it
- 04:52
was a whole lot less if the inflation kicker only went up a modest amount
- 04:55
maybe two to three percent a year because that was our nation's inflation
- 04:59
so considered a little old lady who bought her mansion in 1981 for 250 grand [happy old lady in front of house]
- 05:04
which was worth four million dollars in
- 05:07
well her initial taxes were one point two five percent of 250 grand per year
- 05:12
or 31 hundred bucks and change each year those taxes went up maybe a hundred
- 05:16
bucks so that by 2007 she was paying five grand a year in taxes on a four
- 05:22
million dollar mansion the effective tax rate then is just a little over 0.1% and [numbers of white board]
- 05:28
you can imagine how little realtors love this it makes the cost of moving
- 05:32
exorbitant because the new purchaser pays taxes based on the much higher
- 05:37
purchase price of their new home and is that fair that the little old lady is
- 05:41
paying such low taxes maybe maybe she should maybe she shouldn't well other
- 05:45
states use different systems a common taxman plan is called Miyage or think
- 05:51
thousands that is in a Miyage system there's simply a standard percentage tax [writing on white board]
- 05:56
rate applied to whatever the assessed value of a home comes out to be so you
- 06:01
can imagine that the business of being a home Assessor that is a very popular one [long line of people]
- 06:05
in those kind of states hi Texas we're looking at you and the most popular
- 06:09
Assessors are likely those who give the lowest assessed values and the slowest
- 06:15
tax rates on those kinds of homes and yes if you're wincing there is in fact
- 06:19
room for tons of corruption here well for most
- 06:22
cities real estate taxes alone aren't enough to cover their corn nut you know [pie chart]
- 06:25
their operating expenses consequently most cities offer limited tax bonds
- 06:30
which are issued when other sources of tax hikes can't be done
- 06:33
well these bonds often cover up grades to school districts and police and fire
- 06:37
you know the whole nine yards in California recently interesting
- 06:41
conflicts arose out of the Union pension liability which the city owed to its
- 06:46
local police force it was a big number well a common game in the negotiations
- 06:50
between unions and politicians revolved around retirement economics police could [union and politician playing monopoly]
- 06:54
retire after 30 years of service and collect a pension for the rest of their
- 06:58
lives the deal didn't seem bad when the average cough lived to be l62 but then
- 07:03
cops got organic and shunned the whole donut thing and 82
- 07:08
became the new 62 compounding problems police received as their pension 85% of
- 07:13
whatever their total compensation came to on average in the previous three
- 07:17
years that they worked so in those three years cops put in massive overtime often
- 07:23
working the equivalent of double shifts for three years and as a result salaries [cops working on the streets]
- 07:27
or at least groves take-home amounts skyrocketed
- 07:29
well they then took 85% of that figure and promptly retired hey wouldn't you
- 07:35
now add to this liability to all of us taxpayers the pension obligations and a
- 07:40
bunch of other costs like health insurance and it created a crisis we're
- 07:43
in cities explained that they simply could not afford a police force anymore
- 07:47
or at least not the one they had so instead of pointing to the bloated deals
- 07:52
that were cut by lousy politicians with unions who negotiated beautifully on
- 07:56
their own behalf cities asked their constituent taxpayers to be allowed to
- 08:01
raise taxes when the vote was emphatically no many cities were forced
- 08:05
to fire their entire police and fire forces and outsource them or hire a
- 08:10
service which could negotiate much more intelligently with in market pricing of
- 08:14
course the des moines amateur police and firefighting unit isn't exactly top [mannequins dressed as cops and fire fighter]
- 08:19
notch talent but you know they do their best alright well that's the how and the
- 08:23
why of muni bonds
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